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- #321
E.P. all getting around with muddy feet: been drinking at the dam!
I observed E.P. for about an hour straight today, as they just hung out on the track up the front of the house. Well, guys, Eric was busy – that’s another story – but the chicks pecked and pecked and pecked and pecked. So, what were they eating? At first, I thought left-over grains of wheat, a usual thing; but no. Ants? Nuh, I checked later for presence-of-many-ants.
S.E. is being serious for a change: was it tiny little stones?
Well, it got weird later. I checked two fresh emu-chick blessings. One seemed to be completely grassless. Its consistency was that of sump oil. No lumps. No tiny stones. Just a black goo.
The second was half like a normal blessing, with visible bits of grass – but the other half was the same sump oil.
Any ideas?
And, for the record: S.E. sees in the wild birds' blessings a mysteriously broad range of contents and consistencies, ranging from 'straw bale' to 'sump oil' and in colour from almost bright green to black and red. (Red soil, guys!)
I also watched almost all of a two-hour ballet of emu life involving the locals: E.P. and Mystery Female and Audacious.
F.M. and Audacious once again rendezvoused on the side of the clearing away from the fig tree. It’s a clear pattern. I got a really good look at M.F. as she passed – perhaps the best yet; she’s very shy – and she was doing classical mating-season stuff: neck in; ruff out; walk sideways; and a little minor booming. They left together, and returned well over an hour later.
I wonder where they went?
It’s also interesting to note how sharply they watch me. M.F. was clever enough to spot me watching from inside the house! (I have just finished cleaning all the windows for the inspection.)
Both A and M.F. have a you-can’t-see-me! map of the clearing. I’m not joking. If they are among the fruit trees, and they spot me watching them from the back step, they slip behind a bush from which they can slip to behind a nearby tree that allows them to . . .
. . . ‘disappear’, and turn up a hundred yards away, heading quietly into the scrub.
Overall though, they are clearly becoming tamer. This afternoon, I was in the garden, playing loud music, and when I looked up, Audacious was at the front of the fig tree. Well, that’s a very different emu from the one who turned up here just a couple of weeks ago.
Finally is the ‘what-Eric-was-busy-doing thing.’ While the chicks were peck-peck-peckin’, Eric was looking in the direction in which M.F.-A. had gone. I think there were some vocalisations that I missed. My point is that for perhaps a half an hour I watched Eric ‘watching’ them.
Some readers have really large and ‘variegated’ (got shrubs and trees etc.) environments for their flockettes. You might like to try the following (particularly if you can get a pair of binos, so you can be close from afar):
try to determine the movements of birds by only watching birds that are watching them!
In other words, emu body language. It’s also worth doing something similar with your eyes closed – at least if you have a flockette of birds. Sit with your eyes closed, and audit at length. How much can you figure out?
I betcha that the moment that you undertake to do so consciously, you start noticing things you hadn’t noticed before!
S.E. is gonna make another emoo population-density map. (Oh, S.E. . . . another one!) There is so much data that I just haven’t considered. For example, how very rarely I have ever seen emus cross the highway near my place -- yet I know that at times they transit the strip of scrub between my front fence and the highway.
That indicates something. S.E. just needs to figure out what.
Second example: okay, if birds are not generally coming and going via the back of my place, where are the portals?
Well, d’uh, S.E., there’s an open gateway (not just a downed fence) on the fence between here and The 500, and there’s an open gateway in the fence on the far side of The 500, and there’s a track running straight between the two.
Big Picture: we haven’t seen another bird for days and days. There were the chicks and dad down at the corridor. A foreign bird snuck across the far side of the clearing about a week ago. Didn’t see a bird at The 500 the other day, or one Meadow Two on the same day.
If you think S.E. is a weensy bit nuts about Where Are All The Emus? check out, say, the autumn posts from last winter’s thread, when we saw ten or twelve birds in the clearing every day for weeks on end.
The photo below is of a 'wild' emu chick that has come spontatneously into the carport. Gee, guys!! The chicks are becoming so tame!!

S.E.
I observed E.P. for about an hour straight today, as they just hung out on the track up the front of the house. Well, guys, Eric was busy – that’s another story – but the chicks pecked and pecked and pecked and pecked. So, what were they eating? At first, I thought left-over grains of wheat, a usual thing; but no. Ants? Nuh, I checked later for presence-of-many-ants.
S.E. is being serious for a change: was it tiny little stones?
Well, it got weird later. I checked two fresh emu-chick blessings. One seemed to be completely grassless. Its consistency was that of sump oil. No lumps. No tiny stones. Just a black goo.
The second was half like a normal blessing, with visible bits of grass – but the other half was the same sump oil.
Any ideas?
And, for the record: S.E. sees in the wild birds' blessings a mysteriously broad range of contents and consistencies, ranging from 'straw bale' to 'sump oil' and in colour from almost bright green to black and red. (Red soil, guys!)
I also watched almost all of a two-hour ballet of emu life involving the locals: E.P. and Mystery Female and Audacious.
F.M. and Audacious once again rendezvoused on the side of the clearing away from the fig tree. It’s a clear pattern. I got a really good look at M.F. as she passed – perhaps the best yet; she’s very shy – and she was doing classical mating-season stuff: neck in; ruff out; walk sideways; and a little minor booming. They left together, and returned well over an hour later.
I wonder where they went?
It’s also interesting to note how sharply they watch me. M.F. was clever enough to spot me watching from inside the house! (I have just finished cleaning all the windows for the inspection.)
Both A and M.F. have a you-can’t-see-me! map of the clearing. I’m not joking. If they are among the fruit trees, and they spot me watching them from the back step, they slip behind a bush from which they can slip to behind a nearby tree that allows them to . . .
. . . ‘disappear’, and turn up a hundred yards away, heading quietly into the scrub.
Overall though, they are clearly becoming tamer. This afternoon, I was in the garden, playing loud music, and when I looked up, Audacious was at the front of the fig tree. Well, that’s a very different emu from the one who turned up here just a couple of weeks ago.
Finally is the ‘what-Eric-was-busy-doing thing.’ While the chicks were peck-peck-peckin’, Eric was looking in the direction in which M.F.-A. had gone. I think there were some vocalisations that I missed. My point is that for perhaps a half an hour I watched Eric ‘watching’ them.
Some readers have really large and ‘variegated’ (got shrubs and trees etc.) environments for their flockettes. You might like to try the following (particularly if you can get a pair of binos, so you can be close from afar):
try to determine the movements of birds by only watching birds that are watching them!
In other words, emu body language. It’s also worth doing something similar with your eyes closed – at least if you have a flockette of birds. Sit with your eyes closed, and audit at length. How much can you figure out?
I betcha that the moment that you undertake to do so consciously, you start noticing things you hadn’t noticed before!
S.E. is gonna make another emoo population-density map. (Oh, S.E. . . . another one!) There is so much data that I just haven’t considered. For example, how very rarely I have ever seen emus cross the highway near my place -- yet I know that at times they transit the strip of scrub between my front fence and the highway.
That indicates something. S.E. just needs to figure out what.
Second example: okay, if birds are not generally coming and going via the back of my place, where are the portals?
Well, d’uh, S.E., there’s an open gateway (not just a downed fence) on the fence between here and The 500, and there’s an open gateway in the fence on the far side of The 500, and there’s a track running straight between the two.
Big Picture: we haven’t seen another bird for days and days. There were the chicks and dad down at the corridor. A foreign bird snuck across the far side of the clearing about a week ago. Didn’t see a bird at The 500 the other day, or one Meadow Two on the same day.
If you think S.E. is a weensy bit nuts about Where Are All The Emus? check out, say, the autumn posts from last winter’s thread, when we saw ten or twelve birds in the clearing every day for weeks on end.
The photo below is of a 'wild' emu chick that has come spontatneously into the carport. Gee, guys!! The chicks are becoming so tame!!
S.E.
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